Next president of Tanzania has the big job of rousing Africa’s sleeping giant

Next president of Tanzania has the big job of rousing Africa’s sleeping giant

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500927-01-02.JPG.jpg
Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) Presidential candidate John Magufuli delivers a speech during a political rally on July 14, 2015 in Dar es Salaam, ahead presidential election which will be held in October 2015. PHOTO | EMILE COSTARD | AFP




Tanzania works in mysterious ways. According to all the opinion polls, former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa was by a wide margin the most popular candidate in the crowded field of aspirants seeking to replace Jakaya Kikwete in State House.

But the hierarchy of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi party, which has held power since independence, had other ideas.

In a process every bit as foggy as the conclave of cardinals that selects the Pope, a powerful committee of the party sat and shortlisted five candidates from who delegates would pick a candidate.

Lowassa was not one of them.

There are many debates about the merits and demerits of having a strong and dominant political party in a country. The obvious advantage, which CCM has given Tanzania, is stability. The disadvantage is that an all-powerful party can stifle creativity and competition. It can create a club of leaders who, lacking the insecurity which comes with a strong opposition credibly threatening to take power at the next elections, become complacent and don’t push themselves to achieve better things.

The CCM candidate John Magufuli will face off against opposition leader Wilbrod Slaa although it is unclear whether Lowassa will seek to attain office as an independent candidate.

The new president will have a big job on their hands. With a friend, I recently embarked on a nearly 3,000 kilometre drive through rural Tanzania travelling from Nairobi through Migori and on to Shinyanga and ending up in a magical town called Kigoma by the shores of Lake Tanganyika.Mji wenye hewa safi (the town with perfect weather) as the musicians call it.

We took a different route back, cutting through Tabora and down to Singida and emerging into Kenya through Namanga via Arusha.

BIGGEST GIFT

You learn so much more about a country when you drive through it rather than parachuting into the big cities. But what we learnt was not too surprising.

There are things to admire about Tanzania. The neighbours are calmer and less harried than Kenyans who seem permanently stressed by the aggressive cut and thrust of the big cities. But the weaknesses of Tanzania are also obvious. Put simply, the country is one of Africa’s great underperformers.

Its store of natural resources has few peers in the region. They have gold and silver, diamond and gas in plentiful supply.

Their biggest gift is land. Tanzania is bigger than Nigeria and has less than half its population. Out of the 44 million hectares of its available arable land area, only around 23 per cent is under cultivation. The application of mechanised agriculture could easily turn the country into the bread basket of Africa.

What holds the country back? The CCM has failed to comprehensively abandon the failed policies of the past and modernise. Unlike the Chinese Communist party, which realised that Chairman Mao’s approach had totally failed and quietly engineered an about-turn under Deng Xiaoping, CCM has not found a leader with a similar vision and gravitas.

Policies such as collective ownership of land, which means that farmers cannot use titles as collateral, no longer make sense. Nor does the insistence by some within CCM on the primacy of Kiswahili as the key medium of instruction.

Tanzania needs a leader who can make the country competitive and improve the fortunes of the children going through the school system while avoiding the worst elements of Kenyan society including its ethnic divisions and steep inequality.

On the drive into the neighbouring country, you could see a stark difference between the economic fortunes of border towns.

Migori on the Kenyan side is clearly booming under devolution with new hotels springing up and economic activity going on late into the night. Kisii will soon be a major city.

But once we drove into Tanzania, the contrast could not be starker with people still living in modest huts and leading a peaceful but largely underdeveloped life.

Tanzania should change while preserving the good things about it. It seems most in the country supported Lowassa because despite the corruption claims that have dogged him, he was seen as a strong and effective leader who could chart a new path.

Now the choice will be between Slaa and Magufuli with the CCM candidate starting as favourite. Whoever wins should have the ambition to lead Tanzania in a new direction and help it fulfil its potential.




http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/Tanzania-CCM-Jakaya-Kikwete-John-Magufuli/-/440808/2797988/-/n4gnsbz/-/index.html
 
In Tanzania's defence, the contrast could not be starker because 80% of Kenya's economy is concentrated in the south area bordering Tanzania. Modest huts are as common a sight in Kenya's vast arid North as are skinny malnourished livestock and children; a rare sight in Tanzania. But true. Tanzania is really one of Africa's BIGGEST underperformers. Tanzania yapaswa kuwa EA leader by now in all fields. Na nyinyi waKenya mkome kutajataja rasilimali za TZ....mtameza mate sana!
 
In Tanzania's defence,the contrast could not be starker because 80% of Kenya's economy is concentrated in the south area bordering Tanzania. Modest huts are as common a sight in Kenya's vast arid North as are skinny malnourished livestock and children; a rare sight in Tanzania. But true. Tanzania is really one of Africa's BIGGEST underperformers. Tanzania yapaswa kuwa EA leader by now in all fields. Na nyinyi waKenya mkome kutajataja rasilimali za TZ....mtameza mate sana!
But it's only about 16% of Kenyans that live in that vast arid Northern region while the other around 84% of the population is concentrated in the smaller, fertile, southern portion of Kenya; which is about 3/4 the size of Uganda!

Land indeed is in great scarcity in Kenya.
In my home area for example, the lands have been subdivided into such small portions that some pipo have decided it's really not worth it. They have since abandoned farming to venture into other alternative means of earning a living.
 
In Tanzania's defence, the contrast could not be starker because 80% of Kenya's economy is concentrated in the south area bordering Tanzania. Modest huts are as common a sight in Kenya's vast arid North as are skinny malnourished livestock and children; a rare sight in Tanzania. But true. Tanzania is really one of Africa's BIGGEST underperformers. Tanzania yapaswa kuwa EA leader by now in all fields. Na nyinyi waKenya mkome kutajataja rasilimali za TZ....mtameza mate sana!

It's not easy to talk about Tanzania without mentioning the vast untapped resources that are always going to waste everyday without helping citizens themselves. Foreigners from distant countries have been filling their crave everyday.
 
Kwani hii CCM simuandamane kama wale waarabu muwatoe, otherwise miaka mingine kumi itapitia tu mkiwa pale pale, yaani hata sikujua hamna title deed, huwa mnanunua shamba vipi, ju hata loan ya kuendeleza biashara na baadaye uchumi wa nchi huku huwezi pata kama we ni maskini bila collateral ya ardhi, ai mna changamoto nyingi sana majirani msipowaondoa hawo CCM.
 
500927-01-02.JPG.jpg
Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) Presidential candidate John Magufuli delivers a speech during a political rally on July 14, 2015 in Dar es Salaam, ahead presidential election which will be held in October 2015. PHOTO | EMILE COSTARD | AFP




Tanzania works in mysterious ways. According to all the opinion polls, former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa was by a wide margin the most popular candidate in the crowded field of aspirants seeking to replace Jakaya Kikwete in State House.

But the hierarchy of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi party, which has held power since independence, had other ideas.

In a process every bit as foggy as the conclave of cardinals that selects the Pope, a powerful committee of the party sat and shortlisted five candidates from who delegates would pick a candidate.

Lowassa was not one of them.

There are many debates about the merits and demerits of having a strong and dominant political party in a country. The obvious advantage, which CCM has given Tanzania, is stability. The disadvantage is that an all-powerful party can stifle creativity and competition. It can create a club of leaders who, lacking the insecurity which comes with a strong opposition credibly threatening to take power at the next elections, become complacent and don’t push themselves to achieve better things.

The CCM candidate John Magufuli will face off against opposition leader Wilbrod Slaa although it is unclear whether Lowassa will seek to attain office as an independent candidate.

The new president will have a big job on their hands. With a friend, I recently embarked on a nearly 3,000 kilometre drive through rural Tanzania travelling from Nairobi through Migori and on to Shinyanga and ending up in a magical town called Kigoma by the shores of Lake Tanganyika.Mji wenye hewa safi (the town with perfect weather) as the musicians call it.

We took a different route back, cutting through Tabora and down to Singida and emerging into Kenya through Namanga via Arusha.

BIGGEST GIFT

You learn so much more about a country when you drive through it rather than parachuting into the big cities. But what we learnt was not too surprising.

There are things to admire about Tanzania. The neighbours are calmer and less harried than Kenyans who seem permanently stressed by the aggressive cut and thrust of the big cities. But the weaknesses of Tanzania are also obvious. Put simply, the country is one of Africa’s great underperformers.

Its store of natural resources has few peers in the region. They have gold and silver, diamond and gas in plentiful supply.

Their biggest gift is land. Tanzania is bigger than Nigeria and has less than half its population. Out of the 44 million hectares of its available arable land area, only around 23 per cent is under cultivation. The application of mechanised agriculture could easily turn the country into the bread basket of Africa.

What holds the country back? The CCM has failed to comprehensively abandon the failed policies of the past and modernise. Unlike the Chinese Communist party, which realised that Chairman Mao’s approach had totally failed and quietly engineered an about-turn under Deng Xiaoping, CCM has not found a leader with a similar vision and gravitas.

Policies such as collective ownership of land, which means that farmers cannot use titles as collateral, no longer make sense. Nor does the insistence by some within CCM on the primacy of Kiswahili as the key medium of instruction.

Tanzania needs a leader who can make the country competitive and improve the fortunes of the children going through the school system while avoiding the worst elements of Kenyan society including its ethnic divisions and steep inequality.

On the drive into the neighbouring country, you could see a stark difference between the economic fortunes of border towns.

Migori on the Kenyan side is clearly booming under devolution with new hotels springing up and economic activity going on late into the night. Kisii will soon be a major city.

But once we drove into Tanzania, the contrast could not be starker with people still living in modest huts and leading a peaceful but largely underdeveloped life.

Tanzania should change while preserving the good things about it. It seems most in the country supported Lowassa because despite the corruption claims that have dogged him, he was seen as a strong and effective leader who could chart a new path.

Now the choice will be between Slaa and Magufuli with the CCM candidate starting as favourite. Whoever wins should have the ambition to lead Tanzania in a new direction and help it fulfil its potential.




http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/Tanzania-CCM-Jakaya-Kikwete-John-Magufuli/-/440808/2797988/-/n4gnsbz/-/index.html



!
!
dah hili jino linanikosesha raha sana jamani. Naomba kama kuna mtu asaidie kuiweka katika lugha ambayo haitaniumiza zaidi jino. Jina linauma sana
 
But it's only about 16% of Kenyans that live in that vast arid Northern region while the other around 84% of the population is concentrated in the smaller, fertile, southern portion of Kenya; which is about 3/4 the size of Uganda!

Land indeed is in great scarcity in Kenya.
In my home area for example, the lands have been subdivided into such small portions that some pipo have decided it's really not worth it. They have since abandoned farming to venture into other alternative means of earning a living.
But over half of Kenya landmass and lived by Kenyans! Is 80% of Tanzania living around Shinyanga the area size of South Eastern Kenya? the answer is NO!
 
But over half of Kenya landmass and lived by Kenyans! Is 80% of Tanzania living around Shinyanga the area size of South Eastern Kenya? the answer is NO!

So now u call them kenyans wen a terror attack occurs they are somalis
 
It's not easy to talk about Tanzania without mentioning the vast untapped resources that are always going to waste everyday without helping citizens themselves. Foreigners from distant countries have been filling their crave everyday.
Kenya has largest deposits of titanium and none of you mention about! why?
 
i know they want to come out of Kenya that's the fact, reason being they are neglected!

Who???? Do they want or do the somalis in Somalia want them out of kenya get ur facts right they are the one who came up with the border wall motion in parliament smh
 
Kenya has largest deposits of titanium and none of you mention about! why?

Yes and kwale county is putting up 3 refferal hospitals one university and a housing scheme in kwale county thanks to its titanium deposit also an extension of SGR is passing thru kwale county

Turkana has oil
The largest wind power farm is being built in turkana and also 4.reaort cities and an airport at lodwar are coming up and it's capital is being renovated

Tana river passes thru tana river county

1000000 acres in tan river Galana area is being irrigated to provide food to the whole country


Lamu has gas potential
The biggest project in kenya is in Lamu County

Athi river in kajiado will host Kenya's first nuclear power plant

Kitui has coal
4 coal power plants are already undertaking construction in kenya now
 
So according to geza this are the pple who want to get out of kenya and join somalia

Smh


Garissa,Wajir and Mandera residents begin 30
day peace walk
Sunday, June 14, 2015
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Thousands of northeastern residents on
Saturday begun a daring walk of over 800
kilometres from Garissa town to Mandera
County in a bid to catch the attention of the
international community over rising insecurity
in the region.
Speaking to the press after flagging off the
historical walk that will take about 30 days,
Garissa assistant Sub-County Commissioner
Stephen Orindi said it is an important
initiative by the local youth to sensitise their
people on the importance of collective and
individual responsibility.
"Security is not only the work of government
officials and security agencies but it is the
role of every patriotic Kenyan to play their role
to ensure criminals do not get a chance to
harm us," he said.
Garissa County Executive members Muktar
Bulale (Water) and Sophia Sheikh Omar
(Agriculture and Fisheries) who represented
the county government and walked for 11
kilometres from Tana Bridge to Modika,
praised the event organisers saying it was a
noble initiative.
Activist Salah Abdi Sheikh who is one of the
organisers of the march said the walk is
aimed at raising global attention on the
impact of terrorism that has led to near
alienation of an entire region from the rest of
the country.
He said they want to use the walk to create
awareness among communities in the northern
region faced with immense challenges ranging
from terrorism, clan skirmishes to other
natural calamities, to unite and face those
challenges head on.
"We want communities to think much about
many things that unites them so that we can
promote peace in a region that has seen many
clan related violence that left many people
dead and scores injured," he added.
He said the team will be stopping in the
villages along the way in a bid to sensitise
them on the negative effects of the perennial
clan conflicts, while at the same time
promoting the benefits of peaceful co-
existence among various clans.
He said rescue vehicles to assist those who
will be overwhelmed by the harsh terrain –
scorching sun, wild animals and snake bites-
will be available during the walk and will be
manned by a team of medical personnel who
will be among the team of the participants.
The walk of hope comes at a time when all
essential sectors including education and
health in the region have collapsed in the face
of terror that has scared away from the region
non local professionals after they became a
target of the terrorists.
 
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Kenya has largest deposits of titanium and none of you mention about! why?

Titunium and another mineral discovered in the same place will fetch kenya $100 billion US, investores already found, the necesary infrastructure is the one still in the process, wait another year or two then aks the same question. As we await 4 necesary structure for value addition, the 1st batch of titunium ore was exported last year fetching the company 300mln USD
 
Who???? Do they want or do the somalis in Somalia want them out of kenya get ur facts right they are the one who came up with the border wall motion in parliament smh

..hapana?

..somali communities in northern kenya want to be part of greater somalia. That is why there was rebellion(shifta) in the 70s.

..huku Tanzania, wa-Zanzibari wengi wanataka muungano uvunjike waendeshe nchi yao wenyewe.
 
..hapana?

..somali communities in northern kenya want to be part of greater somalia. That is why there was rebellion(shifta) in the 70s.

..huku Tanzania, wa-Zanzibari wengi wanataka muungano uvunjike waendeshe nchi yao wenyewe.

Its 2015 mm staki vitu za 50yrs ago I wasn't born during the rebellion all somalis I know now are indeed kenyans and they are ironically, the most patriotic of them all ingia somali forums uone venye wasomali wanachukiana
 
But over half of Kenya landmass and lived by Kenyans! Is 80% of Tanzania living around Shinyanga the area size of South Eastern Kenya? the answer is NO!

sam999, how did this statement make sense to u? I have read it, re-read it, tried to eliminate the probable errors but wapi... It's still gibberish to me.
:lol:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Its 2015 mm staki vitu za 50yrs ago I wasn't born during the rebellion all somalis I know now are indeed kenyans and they are ironically, the most patriotic of them all ingia somali forums uone venye wasomali wanachukiana

..the rebellion was brutaly defeated in the 70s but the sentiments to be part of greater somalia are still there.

..kuhusu chuki ipo hata kwa jamii nyingine za wakenya. Kwa mfano, wakikuyu wako radhi kufa kuliko kuongozwa na mjaluo.
 
It's not easy to talk about Tanzania without mentioning the vast untapped resources that are always going to waste everyday without helping citizens themselves. Foreigners from distant countries have been filling their crave everyday.
Kwahio ukizi orodhesha wewe unapata faida gan? tuna rasilimali nyingi na uwezo wa kuamua kutusaidia upo kinacho wasumbua nini! hebu jiulize kuwa hata kama mnadharau lakini kila kukicha nilazima mfanye jambo huku mkitutizama sisi ajabukweli, tunavyo na muda wa kuvitumia ndio sasa na mtambue wakenya muda wenu wa ngonjera umekwisha
 
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